Power, Culture, Economy
Indigenous Australians and Mining
Edited by: Jon Altman, David MartinPlease read Conditions of use before downloading the formats.
Description
Research over the past decade in health, employment, life expectancy, child mortality, and household income has confirmed that Indigenous Australians are still Australia’s most disadvantaged group. Those residing in communities in regional and remote Australia are further disadvantaged because of the limited formal economic opportunities there. In these areas mining developments may be the major—and sometimes the only—contributors to regional economic development. However Indigenous communities have gained only relatively limited long-term economic development benefits from mining activity on land that they own or over which they have property rights of varying significance. Furthermore, while Indigenous people may place high value on realising particular non-economic benefits from mining agreements, there may be only limited capacity to deliver such benefits.
This collection of papers focuses on three large, ongoing mining operations in Queensland, Western Australia and the Northern Territory under two statutory regimes—the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976 and the Native Title Act 1993. The authors outline the institutional basis to greater industry involvement while describing and analysing the best practice principles that can be utilised both by companies and Indigenous community organisations. The research addresses questions such as:
- What factors underlie successful investment in community relations and associated agreement governance and benefit packages for Indigenous communities?
- How are economic and non-economic flows monitored?
- What are the values and aspirations which Indigenous people may bring to bear in their engagement with mining developments?
- What more should companies and government do to develop the capacity and sustainability of local Indigenous organisations?
- What mining company strategies build community capacity to deal with impacts of mining? Are these adequate?
- How to prepare for sustainable futures for Indigenous Australians after mine closure?
- This research was conducted under an Australian Research Council Linkage Project, with Rio Tinto and the Committee for Economic Development of Australia as Industry Partners.
Details
- ISBN (print):
- 9781921536861
- ISBN (online):
- 9781921536878
- Publication date:
- Aug 2009
- Note:
- CAEPR Monograph No. 30
- Imprint:
- ANU Press
- DOI:
- http://doi.org/10.22459/CAEPR30.08.2009
- Series:
- Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research (CAEPR)
- Co-publisher:
- Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research (CAEPR)
- Disciplines:
- Business & Economics; Social Sciences: Indigenous Studies
- Countries:
- Australia
PDF Chapters
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- Preliminary Pages (PDF, 94KB)
- Foreword (PDF, 83KB) – John Nieuwenhuysen
- Notes on contributors (PDF, 84KB)
- Abbreviations and acronyms (PDF, 81KB)
- Acknowledgements (PDF, 58KB)
- Contestations over development (PDF, 117KB) – Jon Altman doi
- Indigenous communities, miners and the state (PDF, 235KB) – Jon Altman doi
- Data mining: Applied demography and the resource extraction industry (PDF, 216KB) – John Taylor doi
- Aboriginal organisations and development: The structural context (PDF, 140KB) – Robert Levitus doi
- The governance of agreements between Aboriginal people and resource developers: Principles for sustainability (PDF, 250KB) – David F. Martin doi
- Corporate responsibility and social sustainability: Is there any connection? (PDF, 153KB) – Katherine Trebeck doi
- Indigenous entrepreneurialism and mining land use agreements (PDF, 224KB) – Sarah Holcombe doi
- Mining agreements, development, aspirations, and livelihoods (PDF, 156KB) – Benedict Scambary doi
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